Abstract

ObjectivesAging HIV-infected antiretroviral-treatment (ART)-controlled patients often present cardiovascular and metabolic comorbidities. Thus, it is mandatory that life-long used ART has no cardiometabolic toxicity. Protease inhibitors have been associated with cardiometabolic risk, integrase-strand-transfer-inhibitors (INSTI) with weight gain and the CCR5 inhibitor maraviroc with improved vascular function. We have previously reported that the INSTI dolutegravir and maraviroc improved, and ritonavir-boosted atazanavir(atazanavir/r) worsened, inflammation and senescence in human coronary artery endothelial cells (HCAEC)s from adult controls. Here, we analyzed the pathways involved in the drugs’ effects on inflammation, senescence and also insulin resistance.MethodsWe analyzed the involvement of the anti-inflammatory SIRT-1 pathway in HCAECs. Then, we performed a transcriptomic analysis of the effect of dolutegravir, maraviroc and atazanavir/r and used siRNA-silencing to address ubiquitin-specific-peptidase-18 (USP18) involvement into ART effects.ResultsDolutegravir reduced inflammation by decreasing NFκB activation and IL-6/IL-8/sICAM-1/sVCAM-1 secretion, as did maraviroc with a milder effect. However, when SIRT-1 was inhibited by splitomicin, the drugs anti-inflammatory effects were maintained, indicating that they were SIRT-1-independant.From the transcriptomic analysis we selected USP18, previously shown to decrease inflammation and insulin-resistance. USP18-silencing enhanced basal inflammation and senescence. Maraviroc still inhibited NFκB activation, cytokine/adhesion molecules secretion and senescence but the effects of dolutegravir and atazanavir/r were lost, suggesting that they involved USP18. Otherwise, in HCAECs, dolutegravir improved and atazanavir/r worsened insulin resistance while maraviroc had no effect. In USP18-silenced cells, basal insulin resistance was increased, but dolutegravir and atazanavir/r kept their effect on insulin sensitivity, indicating that USP18 was dispensable.ConclusionUSP18 reduced basal inflammation, senescence and insulin resistance in coronary endothelial cells. Dolutegravir and atazanavir/r, but not maraviroc, exerted opposite effects on inflammation and senescence that involved USP18. Otherwise, dolutegravir improved and atazanavir/r worsened insulin resistance independently of USP18. Thus, in endothelial cells, dolutegravir and atazanavir/r oppositely affected pathways leading to inflammation, senescence and insulin resistance.

Highlights

  • Aging persons living with HIV, well-controlled by antiretroviral treatment(ART), present a high prevalence of age-related cardiovascular and metabolic comorbidities [1,2,3,4], higher than the prevalence observed in non-infected individuals with similar risk factors [3]

  • Some contemporary used protease inhibitors (PI) have been associated with an increased cardiovascular risk [5,6,7], in part related to the boosting concentration of ritonavir, which leads to raised LDL-cholesterol and triglycerides levels

  • We have previously reported that DTG, raltegravir, MVC, ATV/r and ritonavir-boosted darunavir differentially affected endothelial cells [28]

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Summary

Introduction

Aging persons living with HIV, well-controlled by antiretroviral treatment(ART), present a high prevalence of age-related cardiovascular and metabolic comorbidities [1,2,3,4], higher than the prevalence observed in non-infected individuals with similar risk factors [3]. In these patients, it is mandatory to favor ART with minimal metabolic and cardiovascular toxicity. This could be related to the ability of ATV/r to increase bilirubin levels, because bilirubin has been related to cardio-protective anti-oxidant effects [10]

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